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・ Swedish Biathlon Federation
・ Swedish Bikini Team
・ Swedish bitters
・ Swedish Black chicken
・ Swedish Blue
・ Swedish Board for Computing Machinery
・ Swedish Board of Agriculture
・ Swedish Board of Mines
・ Swedish Book Review
・ Swedish Broadcasting Authority
・ Swedish Broadcasting Commission
・ Swedish Building Maintenance Workers' Union
・ Swedish Building Workers' Union
・ Swedish Business Awards
・ Swedish calendar
Swedish Canadian
・ Swedish carpets and rugs
・ Swedish Centre for Architecture and Design
・ Swedish Chamber Choir
・ Swedish Chamber Orchestra
・ Swedish champions
・ Swedish Championship
・ Swedish Chef
・ Swedish Chemical Society
・ Swedish Chess Championship
・ Swedish Chess Computer Association
・ Swedish Chess Federation
・ Swedish children's literature
・ Swedish Chronicle
・ Swedish Church Ordinance 1571


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Swedish Canadian : ウィキペディア英語版
Swedish Canadian

Swedish Canadians ((スウェーデン語:Svenskkanadensare)) are Canadian citizens of Swedish ancestry or Sweden-born people who resides in Canada. The Swedish Canadian community in Canada is 330,000.〔(Statistics Canada - Swedes in Canada )〕 The vast majority of them reside west of Lake Superior, primarily in Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton and Vancouver. Toronto is the most popular settlement spot for newcomers. Despite having an influential presence and distinctive cultural bond, only 20,000 Canadian persons of Swedish descent speak Swedish.
==Immigration history==
A few Swedes trickled into Canada even before it became a country in 1867, but the first real wave of immigration began in the late 1890s and ended with the onset of the First World War in 1914. Included in this group were a significant number of farmers who had settled first in the United States.
The first Swede, Jacob Fahlström, arrived in Canada in 1809, as an employee of the Hudson's Bay Company. He was succeeded in 1812 by another Swedish man, who was accompanied by two other men from Norway and Ireland to populate the Red River Colony in lower Manitoba. A much more substantive wave of Swedish settlers immigrated to Canada from the United States between 1868 and 1914, as land for farming became more and more scarce in America. Crop failures in their home country between 1866 and 1868 encouraged a similar exodus from Sweden.
The second and largest wave, which came during the 1920s, endured both the depression of the 1930s and the Second World War 1939–45. The third wave, although not as numerous, has been steady since the 1950s.
The immigrant pattern in Canada differs slightly from their counterpart in the United States. Whereas the majority of the earlier Swedish immigrants in America are from south-central Sweden, a significant portion of the Swedish immigrants in Canada are from the Stockholm region and Northern Sweden.〔http://www.multiculturalcanada.ca/Encyclopedia/A-Z/s13/2〕
As the economic situation improved after the Second World War, the overall emigration rate of Sweden slowed down considerably. Very much like recent Swedish emigrants found in other parts of the world, many of the newcomers are connected with Swedish companies, and do not intend to remain in the country permanently.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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